Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Japanese Rice Farmers Create Giant Paddy Art

A small farming community in Inakadate, Japan, has devised a unique tourist attraction as the ultimate makeover for their area – rice murals.

The villagers have been creating impressive imagery by planting rice plants of varying colors on 2,500 sq. meters of land which have been reeling in thousands of tourists to their area.

The murals created by these enterprising farmers included pictures of a traditional Japanese warrior as well as Western icons like Napoleon.

The murals created by these enterprising farmers included pictures of a traditional Japanese warrior as well as Western icons like Napoleon.

To this end, they used the normal lush green plants along with brown-leaved purple rice types and yellow-leaved ones.

The very first few murals were their own take of Mount Iwaki, which was created alongside the slogan “Inakadate, a village of rice culture.”

As years went by, Inakadate villagers became more daring and opted for bigger murals.

Hence in the early 2000s, they recreated the woodwork prints of famous artists like Sharaku on an expansive 15,000 sq meters of land.

rice art05 Japanese Rice Farmers Create Giant Paddy Art picture

The following year, they turned to computer technology for accurate planning and design of the paddy field murals.

All this effort was not in vain. The rice murals of Inakadate village are said to be the largest of their kind in Japan.

As it is, more than 150,000 eager tourists visit the village every year to catch a glimpse of the famous paddy works.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

A hairy sea monster was cast ashore


A strange ugly sea monster was cast ashore in Guinea. It was partially decomposed monster has 4 paws, a tail and long fur .


The scientists who examined the creature said that they had already seen such animals before, but they have no clue to their definition.





Source: fishki.net

Friday, May 8, 2009

What are 1 Million People Doing to Their Firefox Browser? Making it Pretty

Recently, Firefox released an update to their Personas experiment, an add-on designed to simplify the process of skinning and theming your Firefox web browser. It's been downloaded 2.5 million times, to date, and currently exceeds 1 million active daily users. The latest version of this add-on finally introduced some fresh themes to the mix, welcoming over 3000 new designers and 5000 new designs. If you haven't heard of Personas before or have ignored them in the past, we think it's time you checked them out.

Personas, Then and Now

Back when Personas launched in late 2007, we liked the idea, but found the initial crop of designs...well..."ugly as sin." Yikes! Since then, the add-on was seemingly ignored for some time, receiving little attention or improvements. Today, that has changed.

When staring at our bland, boring browser this morning, we decided it was time to take a fresh look at the new Personas and see if the theme selection had really improved. As it turns out, it has - and by leaps and bounds.

Although the category list itself is still somewhat limited, we see a few more options than before. But within each category, where there used to be literally only a handful of choices, there are now at least 10 items to choose from as well as a feed that lets you set Firefox to choose a random theme from that category. Still, didn't Mozilla promise us thousands of designs? Where are they?

Friday, April 17, 2009

Optimize Your Tweet!

Twitter is a social networking and microblogging service that allows you answer the question, "What are you doing?" by sending short text messages 140 characters in length, called "tweets", to your friends, or "followers."

read more | digg story

Monday, March 9, 2009

Google does not want to buy Twitter right now http://adjix.com/73qn
Twitter integrates search into main site http://adjix.com/5s42

Saturday, February 21, 2009

OMG! Did Google Earth find Atlantis?

Google is officially denying widespread Internet rumors that its Google Earth software located the mythical sunken city of Atlantis off the coast of Africa. Either that, or Google is totally trying to hide something. Since I always appreciate a nice juicy conspiracy theory, I'm going to go with the latter.
Yahoo! Search Marketing